Dave Fry's Russell chart does a nice job of illustrating the range we are in and it's pretty much in-line with our Big Chart support level for the RUT, right on the 940 line as the current floor and, as we discussed last week – 950 is the significant cross we are waiting for to finally signal that it's time to flip to our next set of levels, where 950 is the -5% line on the way to our +10% goal at 1,000.
As I noted last Friday, we're camping into the end of the Quarter so we're not expecting a huge move until the end of the month (gotta save something for the rest of the year) but it's also not very likely that "THEY" let the market fall before "THEY" get a chance to print up brochures to show you what a fantastic quarter "THEY" had so "THEY" can convince you to put your money into the casino (so they can get theirs out!).
I should mention that we're done shorting oil as I mentioned on Friday that we liked USO short and SCO long – both good for 3% moves on the ETFs (and a lot more than that on the options, of course). It's a new contract now and we actually liked the Futures (/CL) long off the $92.50 line into inventory this morning (10:30) and I'd love to see a spike up to $95 that we could short into again (as the Fundamentals on oil are still unfavorable) but I'm not even sure they can break $94 without at least a 2Mb draw this morning – we'll have to call an audible in Member Chat on that one.
Also because we've been adding longs on these little "dips" and, frankly, we need the hedge – as we've been pretty bullish during the run-up. Those DIA puts are the only bearish hedge we have in our new Income Portfolio – so it would kind of suck if we had a flash crash and didn't have time to add other covers.
Somebody was worried about something yesterday as the VIX shot up over 15 for the first time since the beginning of March and, before that, it hadn't been over 15 since December – now THAT's COMPLACENCY! We settled down at 14.39 at the end of the day and TLT flirted with $118 (another sign of market anxiety), where it hasn't been since early March either.
If you are thinking "so what?" – then congratulations – you are on the road to becoming a Fudamental Investor. For the most part it's dull – we basically wait for the sheeple to run out of a hyped-up story like this and then we bet that they'll come running back in once the Media is done crying "WOLF" but, unlike the villagers in the classic children's tale – the sheeple never learn. That's why we call them, the Beautiful Sheeple and give them a theme song.
It's not your fault that you're always wrong
The weak ones are there to justify the strong
Capitalism has made it this way,
Old-fashioned fascism will take it away – Marilyn Manson
As you can see from the comments on my post on Income Inequality in Seeking Alpha yesterday, a lot of people are unwilling to look behind that curtain while, in PSW Member Chat, there was barely a mention, as the markets were more interesting for us yesterday than politics – and we're well aware of the levers that are being pulled – which allows us to place our bets accordingly.
The China lever has been pressed down since early Feb and GS and others have used that particular wolf to stampede the masses out of commodities but we've been buying up gold and FCX (copper) as it sold off as well as CLF, who GS just yesterday downgraded, saying iron ore "may average $139 a metric ton" this year because of slowing steel production in, you guessed it – CHINA!
Meanwhile, GS is talking about an AVERAGE of $139 per metric ton vs $144 previously estimated but CLF ($20.33) is in Cleveland Ohio and is one of the primary US suppliers of iron ore. The US is where demand is RISING, not falling. Yes, global prices are generally fungible, but that doesn't mean the local boys don't have an advantage with less shipping, turn time, etc.
X ($19.50) is another one we like playing for a turn on the same premise and the Jan $18 puts can be sold for $2.25, which gives you a net $15.75 entry on a company that does less than 10% of its business outside of the US. X reports on April 29th and we're not expecting anything too exciting this year but next year I imagine they should be comfortably on the way way to making more than $2 a share and that's a buy at $20 in my book, and certainly more than $18!
Back to China, though. So how long can a rapidly growing economy pretend it isn't? About as long as a rapidly pregnant woman can keep putting on the same pair of jeans, right? Every day it gets a little harder until, finally, China has to admit it needs a bigger pair – or maybe some inflation-friendly stretchy pants.
FXI should be a fun play as they test the 200 DMA at $36.36 and if we give them 2 months to recover, we can buy 20 the May $35.50/36.50 bull call spreads for .60 ($1,200) and sell 5 CHL (now $52.50) Jan $47.50 puts for $2.20 ($1,100) and that puts you in $2,000 worth of spreads for net $100 and all FXI (now $36.34) has to do is hold $36.50 through May and the worst-case on the other side is that you end up getting assigned 500 shares of CHL at net $47.52, which is 9.5% below the current price.
Last time I put up a free trade idea like that in the morning post was back on Feb 26th and that was a play that paid for you to attend our upcoming PSW Investor Conference at Harrah's in Atlantic City. At the time it was the very simple sale of 15 CZR March $10 puts for .40 – generating $600 in cash and, of course, those short puts expired worthless on Friday (March expiration day) and we keep the $600 and enjoy a free weekend in Atlantic City.
Who else gives you trade ideas that make you 100% in less than 30 days or gives you trade ideas that pay for the Investing Conference they're promoting AND the hotel AND the MEALS?
As long as we're having a good time – that's what's important, right?